Relacionar Columnas Standard 7-1 VocabularyVersión en línea Vocabulary for standard 7-1 por Amy Murray 1 Mariner's Magnetic Compass 2 Plantation Colony 3 Commercial Revolution 4 Mercantilism 5 Colony 6 Trading Post Colony 7 Settler Colony 8 Columbian Exchange 9 Caravel 10 Joint Stock Company 11 Astrolabe 12 Triangular Trade 13 Middle Passage 14 Capitalism An economic theory in which a country exports more than it imports, thereby building wealth. a company whose stock is owned jointly by the shareholders. a form of colony where foreign people move into a region and make it their new home. A country or region under the control of another country. refers to the trade in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries that involved shipping goods from Britain to West Africa to be exchanged for slaves, these slaves being shipped to the West Indies and exchanged for sugar, rum, and other commodities, which were in turn shipped back to Britain. the sea journey undertaken by slave ships from West Africa to the West Indies. A small, fast Spanish or Portuguese sailing ship of the 15th–17th centuries. Measures the altitude of the sun and stars to calculate latitude. A place or establishment where the trading of goods took place. a usually large farm or estate, especially in a tropical or semitropical country, on which cotton, tobacco, coffee, sugar cane, or the like is cultivated, usually by resident laborers. a period of European economic expansion, colonialism, and mercantilism which lasted from approximately the late 13th century until the early 18th century. an instrument containing a magnetized pointer that shows the direction of magnetic north and bearings from it. refers to a period of cultural and biological exchanges between the New and Old Worlds. Exchanges of plants, animals, diseases and technology transformed European and Native American ways of life. An economic and political system in which a country's trade and industry are controlled by private owners for profit.